"No man of knightly soul would deign by stealth to slay his foe; he meets him face to face. This man who skulks, you say, like a thief, and weaves his plots, him will I take alive, and at your gates' outgoings set him up impaled, a feast for vultures …" (Rhesus 2 to Hector 1. Euripides,
Rhesus 510).

Rhesus 2 is chiefly remembered because he came from Thrace to defend Troy with great pomp and circumstance, but died on the
night of his arrival, without ever engaging in
battle.

The Trojans camp in the plain

In the tenth year of the Trojan War, the nereid
Thetis kissed Zeus' knees
and touched his chin, begging him to avenge her son Achilles, whom Agamemnon had
outraged. And while Achilles, nurturing his
wrath, refused to fight, the god, listening to her
prayers, acquainted the Achaeans with defeat, so
that they would learn to honour him that so often
had brought them victory. This is why Hector 1, the pillar of Troy, could make fierce
attacks against the wall and ditch that the
Achaeans had built to protect themselves,
threatening to destroy their camp and their ships. And so Hector 1,
after a victorious day, besieged the besiegers, and
the Trojans did not seek refuge within the walls,
but instead camped outside the city, midway between
the enemy ships and the river Scamander. And when
night came, they lit innumerable fires through the
plain producing an impressive sight, and round each
one sat fifty men with their horses and chariots
beside them, waiting for Dawn to renew their attack.

In the meantime, Agamemnon could not
snatch a moment's sleep, having glanced from the
Achaean camp at the enemy plain with its many fires
burning. For he feared that after ten years of
efforts the whole expedition would end in disaster.
And since a sleepless king means a sleepless court,
several commanders were woken up to discuss the
situation; for the enemy was sitting close, and the
Trojan plans being unknown, even a night attack
could be feared.

These movements were perceived by the Trojans,
who from the plain noticed the torches going back
and forth. When Hector 1 was informed of the activity in the Achaean camp,
he supposed that the Achaeans, after suffering
defeat the day before, had decided to return to
Hellas. And believing that their escape deprived
him of his final victory, he lamented:

"Ah Fortune,
that you should in triumph's hour rob of his prey
the lion, before my spear with one swoop make and
end of Argos' host!" (Hector 1.
Euripides, Rhesus 56).

Such was Hector 1's
self-confidence at the time when Zeus, not for his but for Achilles' sake, let him
be victorious.

Assuming then that the lights moving in the
enemy camp meant that the Achaeans were boarding
the ships in panic, he wished to attack them, and
by preventing their flight, catch the elusive
victory. But his intent was stopped by Aeneas, who admonished
him:

"Would that
your prudence matched your might of hand! So is it:
one man cannot be all-wise, but diverse gifts to
diverse men belongprowess to you, to others
prudent counsel." (Aeneas to Hector 1. Euripides, Rhesus 105).

There was no reason, continued Aeneas, to deduce from
the fires that the enemy was fleeing. Nor was it
wise, he added, to lead the host over the trenches
in the hush of night, perhaps to find that the
enemy was not in the act of fleeing, but waiting
and well prepared to make a stand. Since others shared Aeneas' opinion, Hector 1 resolved to send a spy to find out which stratagems, if any, the Achaeans were conceiving. It was then that Dolon 1 volunteered to help, and consented to risk his life, as he put it, for the sake of his country. Yet not without a reward; for as he explained:

"… all work that has reward in prospect, is with double pleasure wrought" (Dolon 1 to Hector 1. Euripides, Rhesus 162).

This was no difficulty, since Hector 1, as it appears, was a generous man, ready to share many things, except his royal power. The exception did not pose a difficulty to Dolon 1 either, who clearly stated that he was not interested in carrying the burden of royalty. He also refused to be taken, through marriage, into the royal family, and likewise he rejected gold, since he was son of the sacred herald Eumelus 3, a rich man. And when Hector 1's other guesses also failed, Dolon 1 revealed that he would consent if he were presented, after victory, with the immortal horses of Achilles, which once Poseidon had given to Peleus.

In the meantime, similar thoughts occupied the minds of the assembled Achaean commanders, who deemed it opportune to send someone to spy the Trojans, on the chance of overhearing some talk about their plans. And after offering the rewards they judged appropriate (or perhaps only those rewards that could be afforded, since they were not as great as that promised to Dolon 1), Odysseus and Diomedes 2 were
appointed to steal into the Trojan camp.

Arrival of Rhesus 2

It was approximately at this time, on this fatal night, that Rhesus 2, king of Thrace, having crossed the Hellespont with a host, appeared in the plain, purposing to assist the city that so many times before had entreated him to come to its help. Wearing a magnificent golden armour, and driving a chariot beautifully finished with gold and silver, drawn by horses whiter than snow, Rhesus 2 was a fantastic sight. And to let his arrival gain even more splendor, he declared that already the day after he would storm the enemy camp, and falling upon the fleet, he would slay the Achaeans. And for that prowess, he asserted, no one else was needed except himself and his Thracians.

Reproaches

Allies are almost always welcome. Yet Hector 1 did not receive
this golden-mailed commander with an open heart.
For feeling that victory was at hand, he thought
that the Thracian had arrived for the feast rather
than for the fight. He therefore reproached him his
late arrival, saying:

"Long, long since should you have come to aid this land …"

and

"You cannot say that you did not come to your friends, nor visited them, for lack of bidding. What Trojan herald, or what embassy came not with instant prayer for help …? What splendour of gifts did we not send to you?" (Hector 1 to Rhesus 2. Euripides, Rhesus 396ff.).

This said, Hector 1 also reminded him of how he in the past had come to Thrace to help Rhesus 2 get rid of his enemies, thus securing the Thracian kingdom for him.

Boasts

But as Hector 1 soon
learned, this man had simply been too busy, and as
vexed as anyone else on account of his own absence.
For each time he had wished, during the last ten
years, to march to Troy,
the Scythians, he
explained, had fallen upon his kingdom. But now,
having defeated them, taken hostages, imposed
tribute, and so on, he was finally at Troy; and although his
coming was late, he said, it was nevertheless
timely, since Hector 1, in ten years, had achieved nothing. By way of contrast, he now purposed to defeat the Achaeans in one battle, and besides march afterwards against Hellas, and destroy it for all time to come. When they had thus exchanged enough boasts and
reproaches, Hector 1 assigned a place to encamp and rest to Rhesus 2 and his troops.

The spies meet

In the meanwhile, Odysseus and Diomedes 2,
conveniently equipped for their mission, left the
Achaean camp, picking their way among the dead of
the last day's battle. Soon, as they went through
the darkness of night, they discovered a man coming
towards them, and having hidden among the dead
beside the path, they let him pass and go a little
way, before they pounced on him from behind.

Dolon 1

On hearing footsteps behind him, Dolon 1 (for that was the man) stopped, since these could be Trojans, perhaps bringing him a message from the camp. But when the other two came closer, he knew them for enemies and started to run as fast as he could, although in the wrong direction. As he came closer to the Achaean outposts, Diomedes 2 reached him, threatening him with his spear, and Dolon 1 came to a halt pale with fear and with his teeth chattering in his mouth. When his pursuers gripped his arms, Dolon 1 burst into tears, begging to be taken alive, and promising to ransom himself with the bronze and gold that his father would gladly pay, on learning that his son had been made a prisoner. Odysseus replied by exhorting him to pull himself together, and not be troubled by the thought of death. And then he let a rain of questions fall on Dolon 1: on his reason to leave his camp, on the whereabouts of his commander in chief, on the position of the Trojan sentries, on the Trojan plans, and on the places where everybody was sleeping. Dolon 1, for whom life was now more precious than Achilles' immortal
horses, did pull himself together in his own way,
and answered truthfully all the questions, telling
that Hector 1 had sent him, revealing where this same commander now was, how the guards kept a lookout, in which parts of the camp the allies of the Trojans were sleeping, and which the positions were of the Carians, the Mysians, the Phrygians, the Lycians, and several others. And Dolon 1's fear make him so helpful that he even came with proposals:

"If your idea is to raid our positions, what about the Thracians, newcomers, on their own, at the very end of the line? Rhesus, their king … is with them. That man has the loveliest and biggest horses I have ever seen. They are whiter than snow and they run like the wind. And his chariot is cunningly wrought with gold and silver, and he brought a huge armour of gold with him too, a wonderful sight." (Dolon 1 to Odysseus.
Homer, Iliad 10.435).

Having truthfully revealed all these excellent things, Dolon 1 expected to be taken as a prisoner to the ships, or to be tied up, while the other two found out whether he had told them the truth or not. But Diomedes 2, having decided not to let the man ever be a nuisance again, fell on him with his sword, just as Dolon 1 was about to plead for mercy, and cut off his head, which, as they say, met the dust before it ceased to speak. Such was the end of Dolon 1.

The Thracian encampment

After Rhesus' death. Present: Diomedes, Odysseus, Nestor. | il203flax: "And the horseman, Nestor of Gerenia, was first to question them: 'Come tell me now, Odysseus, greatly to be praised, great glory of the Achaeans, how you both took these horses. Was it by entering the throng of the Trojans? Or did some god that met you give you them? Wondrous like are they to rays of the sun.'" (Hom.Il.10.545). John Flaxman (1755 – 1826).

Now Odysseus and Diomedes 2 went ahead through the night, the arms, and the dead, coming soon to the Thracian encampment, where they found the equipment neatly piled and the men asleep, with a pair of horses beside each one of them. Soon they discovered the horses whiter than snow; and they knew that the man beside them, breathing heavily under the influence of evil dreams (as they say), was Rhesus 2.

The carnage

In the silence of the night, the two saboteurs
quickly divided the tasks among them; and while Diomedes 2 killed the
men with his sword, Odysseus dragged aside the bodies, so that the horses might easily pass and not be frightened if they trod over a corpse. In such way they slew twelve men, Rhesus 2 being the thirteenth; and having unfastened the horses whiter than snow from the chariot, they mounted and hastily returned to the Achaean camp.

Tears and laughter

Such was the end of Rhesus 2, who came to the war with decorated chariot, and ornamented armour, but for having been caught by death unawares, is remembered for all that wasted paraphernalia. Some may find his fate tragic, and had they
known the man personally, they would have probably
lamented and wept. But others, not founding
proportion between his looks and ambition, and on
the other hand, the way in which he, so suddenly,
was deprived of both life and glory, may find it
laughable. For Nemesis, they may argue, is known for reestablishing proportion, through the punishment of excessive pride. Not seldom the experiences of men, in war or in
peace, are met with either tears or laughter. And
those who weep believe themselves to be more loving
and pious, taking everything to heart, and sighing
and groaning in the company of others like them.
But those who laugh at human fate, not out of
cruelty, but for knowing that human happiness has
an end, deem it more dignified to face with a smile
what fate will anyway impose. This is their method
for reducing misery in their hearts; and for
despising tears, they believe themselves to be
wiser. In any case, with either tears or laughter, few escape amazement. And certainly not Hippocoon 1 and the other Thracians. For they were amazed beyond measure when they discovered the hideous carnage, the absence of the horses whiter than snow, and their dead king. And since amazing things may have an amazing origin, there were those who believed that the carnage had been staged by treason within the Trojan camp. But Hector 1, who had no joy in seeing his ally dead, knew that spies had killed the king, and that for him nothing could be done except burn him with splendor, thereby calming tears. As for cruel laughter, it moved to the Achaean camp, where Odysseus and Diomedes 2, after
taking a bath, had supper together, during which
they made libations to Athena, the goddess who
helped them.

Arganthone was a huntress from Cius, a city (now Gemlik) near Mount Arganthonius, in Bithynia (northwestern Asia Minor). Rhesus 2, it is told, fell in love with her in the course of one of his many trips abroad. But he, instead of openly declaring his feelings, said that, hating the company of men, he just desired to hunt in her company. At first she was delighted with his friendship, but later she fell in love with him, and they married by mutual consent. It is said that Arganthone (and not his war against Scythia) was the reason
of his delay in coming to Troy. When he at last went
to the war, Diomedes 2 slew him in a battle by the river Rhesus (which flows from Mount Ida in the Troad), and not, as others say, while he slept. On learning about Rhesus 2's death, Arganthone starved herself to death.